US6720131B1 - Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US6720131B1
US6720131B1 US10/446,582 US44658203A US6720131B1 US 6720131 B1 US6720131 B1 US 6720131B1 US 44658203 A US44658203 A US 44658203A US 6720131 B1 US6720131 B1 US 6720131B1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
plate
plates
jetting
developer solution
developer
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US10/446,582
Inventor
Howard A. Fromson
William J. Rozell
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Anocoil Corp
Original Assignee
Anocoil Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Anocoil Corp filed Critical Anocoil Corp
Priority to US10/446,582 priority Critical patent/US6720131B1/en
Priority to US10/783,759 priority patent/US7013806B2/en
Assigned to ANOCOIL CORPORATION reassignment ANOCOIL CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: FROMSON, HOWARD A.
Assigned to FROMSON, HOWARD A. reassignment FROMSON, HOWARD A. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ROZELL, WILLIAM J.
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US6720131B1 publication Critical patent/US6720131B1/en
Priority to PCT/US2004/011758 priority patent/WO2004108413A2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03FPHOTOMECHANICAL PRODUCTION OF TEXTURED OR PATTERNED SURFACES, e.g. FOR PRINTING, FOR PROCESSING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; MATERIALS THEREFOR; ORIGINALS THEREFOR; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
    • G03F7/00Photomechanical, e.g. photolithographic, production of textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. printing surfaces; Materials therefor, e.g. comprising photoresists; Apparatus specially adapted therefor
    • G03F7/26Processing photosensitive materials; Apparatus therefor
    • G03F7/30Imagewise removal using liquid means
    • G03F7/3042Imagewise removal using liquid means from printing plates transported horizontally through the processing stations
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41CPROCESSES FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR REPRODUCTION OF PRINTING SURFACES
    • B41C1/00Forme preparation
    • B41C1/10Forme preparation for lithographic printing; Master sheets for transferring a lithographic image to the forme
    • B41C1/1083Mechanical aspects of off-press plate preparation

Definitions

  • the present invention is directed to a method and apparatus for applying a uniform film of fluid to a flat surface being conveyed through a workstation and specifically for applying a uniform film of developer to lithographic printing plates in a developing station.
  • the invention is particularly directed to the use of a jetting printhead for uniformly distributing the fluid over the workpiece.
  • the present invention is applicable to various planar workpieces and various types of workstations but is particularly applicable to lithographic printing plates which have been imaged and require the application of a developer to remove the areas of the coating on the plate which have been rendered soluble by the imaging process.
  • the invention has a broader application, it will be described with particular reference to lithographic printing plate development.
  • One method for the development of the imaged plates entails the application of a thin film or layer of developing solution to the imaged plate surface of each imaged plate to be developed. This thin film of developer solution is allowed to dwell on the plate for a time sufficient to complete the development and then rinsed from the plate. Because only a thin film of developer solution is applied to each plate, any variation of any part of the surface of the plate from being substantially flat and horizontal and any variation in the thickness of the film of developer and any variation in the dwell time of the developer on different areas of the plate can result in the improper development of the coating. Also, the coating of individual, discrete plates requires the ability to precisely initiate the coating process and precisely terminate the coating process on individual plates delivered at irregular intervals. The developer fluid must be applied in the correct amount uniformly distributed across the width and length of the plate, with minimal waste.
  • Typical imaging methods include exposure to radiation and writing by ink jet.
  • the imaging process renders the coating soluble in the imaged areas of a positive-working plate and renders the coating insoluble in the imaged areas of a negative-working plate. In either case, it is the coating which has been rendered soluble or the coating which has remained soluble that is removed.
  • the particular compositions of the developer solutions for these different types of printing plates are well known.
  • many of the printing plates currently in use are positive-working plates and have coatings that contain alkali-soluble resins, specifically phenolic or acrylic resins. These coatings usually contain dissolution inhibitors that render them insoluble in the alkaline developers. The imaging process reverses this dissolution inhibition and the coating then becomes soluble in the areas subjected to the imaging radiation.
  • the difference between the solubility of the imaged and non-imaged areas of the coating is generally less than the difference in solubility for negative-working plates. For that reason, the development process is more critical for positive-working plates. Also, the development mechanism for positive-working plates is a percolation process and a quiescent film of developer solution is critical. Any relative movement between the developer and the surface of the plate must be minimized or eliminated. Furthermore, the film of developer must be uniform with no bubbles. For these reasons, it is critical how the developer is applied to the plate.
  • the invention is specifically directed to the development of lithographic printing plates and comprises a novel system and method for applying the thin film of developer solution to each plate in a controlled manner using a jetting printhead (commonly referred to as an inkjet printer) as a coating device operating in a continuous mode as the plate is conveyed through the developer station.
  • a jetting printhead commonly referred to as an inkjet printer
  • the developer solution is allowed to dwell on the plate as it is conveyed across a horizontal support structure for a sufficient time to allow for percolation into and/or dissolution of the soluble areas of the coating.
  • the invention permits and includes the processing of plates passing side-by-side through the developer and at different intervals.
  • FIG. 1 is a general diagrammatic sketch of a coating apparatus, specifically a lithographic printing plate developer, incorporating the novel method and apparatus for the present invention for applying a uniform film of fluid to a moving flat surface.
  • FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic plan view of the conveyor showing the processing of two plate lines at different intervals.
  • the diagrammatic drawing illustrates the general arrangement for practicing the invention illustrating the equipment and method for developing an imaged lithographic printing plate.
  • the developer apparatus comprises a substantially horizontal support structure which is preferably a platen 12 which may be any flat, horizontal surface composed of materials which will be unaffected by the particular developer solution to be used.
  • substantially flat and or substantially horizontal are defined as deviating from flat and/or horizontal only to the degree that the developer solution applied to the plate does not flow over or off of the surface of the plate. That is, the developer solution will remain as a film on the plate and have a thickness that produces uniform development over the entire area of the plate.
  • the printing plate 14 which has been exposed and thus imaged, is carried across the platen 12 by means of a conveyor which comprises the conveyor drive rollers 16 and 18 and a continuous flexible conveyor belt 20 .
  • the conveyor belt 20 is composed of a material which will be unaffected by the developer solution, such as stainless steel or a polymer material.
  • the printing plate 14 is fed by the feed rollers 22 and 24 onto the feed platform 26 which directs the printing plate onto the conveyor belt 20 for transport across the platen 12 .
  • the printing plate is guided by the discharge platform 28 into a pair of discharge rollers 30 and 32 .
  • the flat platen is the preferred support structure, other supports can be employed for the conveyor belt.
  • the support structure could be a series of rollers which have a small diameter and are closely spaced such that they provide adequate support to maintain a flat plate.
  • the drawing depicts a conveyor belt for conveying the plate across the support structure, other conveying means could be employed.
  • the plate can initially be conveyed across a support structure such as a platen by the feed rollers for the plate and it can then be further conveyed the remaining distance directly by small driven rollers.
  • the thin film of developer solution be substantially uniformly distributed over the entire upper, imaged surface of the plate as it is being conveyed across the platen.
  • the plate on the conveyor be substantially flat and substantially horizontal or level and begins with having a substantially flat, horizontal support structure and, therefore, a substantially flat horizontal conveyor belt. Since the printing plates are very thin and flexible, surface tension is used to hold the plate firmly in position and flat on the conveyor belt. For example, this can be done by providing a film of water between the plate and the conveyor belt.
  • a jetting printhead represented at 34 is used for metering and feeding the developer solution to the plate to control the thickness and assure the uniformity of the developer solution on the plate.
  • the jetting printhead 34 is mounted on the track 36 for movement back and forth across the plate in a raster or scan pattern as is well known in the inkjet printer technology.
  • the developer solution in the jetting printhead 34 is replenished from the reservoir 38 through the flexible tube 40 .
  • the plate sensor 42 such as a photoelectric sensor, detects the leading and trailing ends of the plate 14 .
  • This sensor 42 is connnected to the jetting printhead control unit 44 which is connected to and operates the jetting printhead. Since the conveyor speed is known, the plate sensor 42 can initiate operation of the jetting printhead at exactly the proper time to begin the coating right at the leading end of the plate. Likewise, the sensor can terminate operation when the trailing end has been coated.
  • the present invention delivers precisely the required volume of developer at precisely the rate required to obtain a uniform film of developer on the plate in the amount needed to process the plate with very little excess.
  • the delivery of the developer is commenced at the beginning of the plate and continues at the appropriate rate until the end of the plate where it is stopped. Since there is little if any excess developer applied, the problems with developer degradation that arise from the recirculation of excess developer are eliminated.
  • the printing plate which has been coated with the developer solution continues to travel across the platen.
  • the length and speed of travel is selected such that the developer solution will have completed the development process by the time the printing plate reaches the discharge end of the platen.
  • a typical development time is 20 to 60 seconds.
  • rinse water from the supply 65 is sprayed onto the plate through the spray nozzles 66 and 68 .
  • a collection pan 70 which collects all of the liquid run off from the printing plate including the spent developer solution and rinse water now containing the portion of the coating which has been dissolved away.
  • the developer solution which is rinsed from the plate is collected at 72 and sent to waste.
  • the present invention is also particularly suited to the development of lithographic printing plates in a plurality of lines or lanes in a single developing station with a single conveyor system.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a portion of the conveyor belt 20 moving in the direction of the arrow 46 .
  • the two plates can be directly side-by-side or they can be staggered as may be desired or convenient as shown in this FIG. 2 .
  • each plate has its own “lane” on the conveyor belt.
  • Extending across the conveyor belt is the track 36 on which is mounted the jetting printhead 34 for movement back and forth across both plates.
  • a plate sensor 42 is located in each lane for detecting the leading and trailing ends of the plates. These sensors are connected to the control unit 44 whereby the jetting printhead can be activated to move and activated to dispense the developer solution only in a lane containing a plate. In other words, the jetting printhead will dispense developer during the travel across a plate in one lane but will then shut off during the travel across the empty lane.
  • an optical scanner 48 mounted on a track 50 may be used to detect the side edges of the plates. With this scanner 48 connected to the control unit 44 , the jetting printhead can be activated to dispense the developer only onto the plates. The dispensing of developer would then be deactivated between plates and past the outside edges of the plates.
  • jetting printhead which could be employed in the present invention is the Spectra Nova 256/80 series of printhead from Spectra, Inc. of Riverside, New Hampshire. These printheads have the following characteristics:
  • a feature of the invention is that the fluid is applied uniformly over the plate at the required thickness. This contrasts sharply with prior art arrangements where the fluid is applied to the plate some distance ahead of a device which spreads the developer uniformly over the plate.
  • a further feature is that the fluid is applied in the exact amount required to form a uniform film of the desired thickness without the need to remove and recycle excess fluid.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Photosensitive Polymer And Photoresist Processing (AREA)

Abstract

The invention relates to the development of lithographic printing plates and comprises the application of a thin film of developer solution to each plate in a controlled manner using a jetting printhead which scans the plate to apply the developer solution as the plate is conveyed under the jetting printhead. Sensors and control means activate and deactivate the scanning jetting printhead in response to the presence or absence of a plate. The developer is allowed to dwell on the plate as it is conveyed across a support structure for a sufficient time to allow for percolation into and/or dissolution of the soluble areas of the coating and is then washed off and sent to waste.

Description

The present invention is directed to a method and apparatus for applying a uniform film of fluid to a flat surface being conveyed through a workstation and specifically for applying a uniform film of developer to lithographic printing plates in a developing station. The invention is particularly directed to the use of a jetting printhead for uniformly distributing the fluid over the workpiece. The present invention is applicable to various planar workpieces and various types of workstations but is particularly applicable to lithographic printing plates which have been imaged and require the application of a developer to remove the areas of the coating on the plate which have been rendered soluble by the imaging process. Although the invention has a broader application, it will be described with particular reference to lithographic printing plate development.
One method for the development of the imaged plates entails the application of a thin film or layer of developing solution to the imaged plate surface of each imaged plate to be developed. This thin film of developer solution is allowed to dwell on the plate for a time sufficient to complete the development and then rinsed from the plate. Because only a thin film of developer solution is applied to each plate, any variation of any part of the surface of the plate from being substantially flat and horizontal and any variation in the thickness of the film of developer and any variation in the dwell time of the developer on different areas of the plate can result in the improper development of the coating. Also, the coating of individual, discrete plates requires the ability to precisely initiate the coating process and precisely terminate the coating process on individual plates delivered at irregular intervals. The developer fluid must be applied in the correct amount uniformly distributed across the width and length of the plate, with minimal waste.
Typical imaging methods include exposure to radiation and writing by ink jet. As is well known in the art, the imaging process renders the coating soluble in the imaged areas of a positive-working plate and renders the coating insoluble in the imaged areas of a negative-working plate. In either case, it is the coating which has been rendered soluble or the coating which has remained soluble that is removed. The particular compositions of the developer solutions for these different types of printing plates are well known. For example, many of the printing plates currently in use are positive-working plates and have coatings that contain alkali-soluble resins, specifically phenolic or acrylic resins. These coatings usually contain dissolution inhibitors that render them insoluble in the alkaline developers. The imaging process reverses this dissolution inhibition and the coating then becomes soluble in the areas subjected to the imaging radiation.
If the developer is applied to the surface in excess and the excess metered off by some device and subsequently recovered, the recovered excess has been exposed to the atmosphere, and as such is subject to degradation. It is well documented in the art that atmospheric carbon dioxide rapidly reduces the alkalinity of aqueous alkaline developers of the type very commonly used in the processing of positive-working plates. Thus the recovered developer that is being reused will not have the same alkalinity as fresh, new developer. This recovered developer is in fact therefore reused in a way that with each application of developer to the plate, some fraction of the developer metered off and recovered will have been removed in a previous cycle of development. Thus the repeated exposure to carbon dioxide and resultant degradation will further alter the effective alkalinity of the developer. Further, if the developer is applied some distance ahead of the point where the excess is removed, some degree of development is certain to take place and it may very well be uneven.
With positive-working plates, the difference between the solubility of the imaged and non-imaged areas of the coating is generally less than the difference in solubility for negative-working plates. For that reason, the development process is more critical for positive-working plates. Also, the development mechanism for positive-working plates is a percolation process and a quiescent film of developer solution is critical. Any relative movement between the developer and the surface of the plate must be minimized or eliminated. Furthermore, the film of developer must be uniform with no bubbles. For these reasons, it is critical how the developer is applied to the plate.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention is specifically directed to the development of lithographic printing plates and comprises a novel system and method for applying the thin film of developer solution to each plate in a controlled manner using a jetting printhead (commonly referred to as an inkjet printer) as a coating device operating in a continuous mode as the plate is conveyed through the developer station. The developer solution is allowed to dwell on the plate as it is conveyed across a horizontal support structure for a sufficient time to allow for percolation into and/or dissolution of the soluble areas of the coating. The invention permits and includes the processing of plates passing side-by-side through the developer and at different intervals.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a general diagrammatic sketch of a coating apparatus, specifically a lithographic printing plate developer, incorporating the novel method and apparatus for the present invention for applying a uniform film of fluid to a moving flat surface.
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic plan view of the conveyor showing the processing of two plate lines at different intervals.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The diagrammatic drawing illustrates the general arrangement for practicing the invention illustrating the equipment and method for developing an imaged lithographic printing plate. The developer apparatus comprises a substantially horizontal support structure which is preferably a platen 12 which may be any flat, horizontal surface composed of materials which will be unaffected by the particular developer solution to be used. In the context of the present invention and as used herein, the terms substantially flat and or substantially horizontal are defined as deviating from flat and/or horizontal only to the degree that the developer solution applied to the plate does not flow over or off of the surface of the plate. That is, the developer solution will remain as a film on the plate and have a thickness that produces uniform development over the entire area of the plate. The printing plate 14, which has been exposed and thus imaged, is carried across the platen 12 by means of a conveyor which comprises the conveyor drive rollers 16 and 18 and a continuous flexible conveyor belt 20. The conveyor belt 20 is composed of a material which will be unaffected by the developer solution, such as stainless steel or a polymer material. The printing plate 14 is fed by the feed rollers 22 and 24 onto the feed platform 26 which directs the printing plate onto the conveyor belt 20 for transport across the platen 12. After processing, the printing plate is guided by the discharge platform 28 into a pair of discharge rollers 30 and 32. Although the flat platen is the preferred support structure, other supports can be employed for the conveyor belt. For example, the support structure could be a series of rollers which have a small diameter and are closely spaced such that they provide adequate support to maintain a flat plate. Also, although the drawing depicts a conveyor belt for conveying the plate across the support structure, other conveying means could be employed. Merely as one example, the plate can initially be conveyed across a support structure such as a platen by the feed rollers for the plate and it can then be further conveyed the remaining distance directly by small driven rollers.
In order to properly develop an imaged plate in accordance with the present invention, it is essential that the thin film of developer solution be substantially uniformly distributed over the entire upper, imaged surface of the plate as it is being conveyed across the platen. This requires that the plate on the conveyor be substantially flat and substantially horizontal or level and begins with having a substantially flat, horizontal support structure and, therefore, a substantially flat horizontal conveyor belt. Since the printing plates are very thin and flexible, surface tension is used to hold the plate firmly in position and flat on the conveyor belt. For example, this can be done by providing a film of water between the plate and the conveyor belt.
In the present invention, a jetting printhead represented at 34 is used for metering and feeding the developer solution to the plate to control the thickness and assure the uniformity of the developer solution on the plate. The jetting printhead 34 is mounted on the track 36 for movement back and forth across the plate in a raster or scan pattern as is well known in the inkjet printer technology. The developer solution in the jetting printhead 34 is replenished from the reservoir 38 through the flexible tube 40. The plate sensor 42, such as a photoelectric sensor, detects the leading and trailing ends of the plate 14. This sensor 42 is connnected to the jetting printhead control unit 44 which is connected to and operates the jetting printhead. Since the conveyor speed is known, the plate sensor 42 can initiate operation of the jetting printhead at exactly the proper time to begin the coating right at the leading end of the plate. Likewise, the sensor can terminate operation when the trailing end has been coated.
In contrast to the known techniques where an excess of fluid is applied and subsequently metered off the plate, the present invention delivers precisely the required volume of developer at precisely the rate required to obtain a uniform film of developer on the plate in the amount needed to process the plate with very little excess. The delivery of the developer is commenced at the beginning of the plate and continues at the appropriate rate until the end of the plate where it is stopped. Since there is little if any excess developer applied, the problems with developer degradation that arise from the recirculation of excess developer are eliminated.
The printing plate which has been coated with the developer solution continues to travel across the platen. The length and speed of travel is selected such that the developer solution will have completed the development process by the time the printing plate reaches the discharge end of the platen. A typical development time is 20 to 60 seconds. At this point, rinse water from the supply 65 is sprayed onto the plate through the spray nozzles 66 and 68. Located below the conveyor structure is a collection pan 70 which collects all of the liquid run off from the printing plate including the spent developer solution and rinse water now containing the portion of the coating which has been dissolved away. The developer solution which is rinsed from the plate is collected at 72 and sent to waste. It can be seen that there is always only fresh developer solution being applied to the plates and that there is only a small quantity of developer solution applied to each plate. It has been discovered that the consumption of developer solution can be reduced by as much as 50% when compared to a conventional printing plate development processor.
The present invention is also particularly suited to the development of lithographic printing plates in a plurality of lines or lanes in a single developing station with a single conveyor system. This aspect of the system is shown in FIG. 2 which illustrates a portion of the conveyor belt 20 moving in the direction of the arrow 46. Located on the conveyor belt 20 are two plates 14 (it could be more than two) in side-by-side relationship. The two plates can be directly side-by-side or they can be staggered as may be desired or convenient as shown in this FIG. 2. In effect, each plate has its own “lane” on the conveyor belt. Extending across the conveyor belt is the track 36 on which is mounted the jetting printhead 34 for movement back and forth across both plates. A plate sensor 42 is located in each lane for detecting the leading and trailing ends of the plates. These sensors are connected to the control unit 44 whereby the jetting printhead can be activated to move and activated to dispense the developer solution only in a lane containing a plate. In other words, the jetting printhead will dispense developer during the travel across a plate in one lane but will then shut off during the travel across the empty lane. As a further refinement, an optical scanner 48 mounted on a track 50 may be used to detect the side edges of the plates. With this scanner 48 connected to the control unit 44, the jetting printhead can be activated to dispense the developer only onto the plates. The dispensing of developer would then be deactivated between plates and past the outside edges of the plates.
A specific example of jetting printhead which could be employed in the present invention is the Spectra Nova 256/80 series of printhead from Spectra, Inc. of Lebanon, New Hampshire. These printheads have the following characteristics:
Image height 2.8 inches
Number of orifices 256
Drop rate per orifice 20,000/sec.
Drop volume 75 picoliters (pl)
To process plates at the rate of 48 inches per minute, the time for each swipe of the printhead would be: 2.8 inches × 60 sec./min. 48 inches/min. = 3.5 seconds
Figure US06720131-20040413-M00001
Thus there would be:
3.5 sec.×20,000 drops/sec.−70,000 drops/orifice/swipe
For 256 orifices, there would be:
256×70,000 drops×75 pi=1.34 ml=0.082 in3
For a 14 inch wide plate, the area covered in one swipe is 39.2 in2. Therefore, the film thickness is: 0.082 in 3 39.2 in 2 = 0.0021 in or 2.1 mils
Figure US06720131-20040413-M00002
A feature of the invention is that the fluid is applied uniformly over the plate at the required thickness. This contrasts sharply with prior art arrangements where the fluid is applied to the plate some distance ahead of a device which spreads the developer uniformly over the plate. A further feature is that the fluid is applied in the exact amount required to form a uniform film of the desired thickness without the need to remove and recycle excess fluid.

Claims (4)

What is claimed is:
1. A method of applying a thin film of developer solution to lithographic printing plates having imaged coatings on a surface thereof comprising areas of coating insoluble in said developer solution and areas of coating soluble in said developer solution, said method comprising conveying said plates across a substantially horizontal support structure, scanning said plates being conveyed with a jetting printhead and jetting a uniform layer of developer solution onto said imaged coatings with said jetting printhead to dissolve said soluble coating and produce a spent developer solution and developed plates and removing said spent developer solution from said developed plates and discharging said spent developer solution to waste.
2. A method as recited in claim 1 further comprising the steps of sensing the leading ends of said plates being conveyed to activate said scanning and said jetting of said jetting printhead and sensing the trailing ends of said plates being conveyed to deactivate said scanning and said jetting of said jetting printhead.
3. A method as recited in claim 2 and further comprising the step of sensing the sides of said plates being conveyed and thereby activating and deactivating said jetting of said jetting printhead.
4. A method as recited in claim 3 wherein said step of conveying said plates comprises conveying plates along side-by-side paths and wherein said step of sensing the sides of said plates includes deactivating said jetting of said jetting printhead between said paths.
US10/446,582 2003-05-28 2003-05-28 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station Expired - Fee Related US6720131B1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/446,582 US6720131B1 (en) 2003-05-28 2003-05-28 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
US10/783,759 US7013806B2 (en) 2003-05-28 2004-02-20 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
PCT/US2004/011758 WO2004108413A2 (en) 2003-05-28 2004-04-16 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/446,582 US6720131B1 (en) 2003-05-28 2003-05-28 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/783,759 Continuation-In-Part US7013806B2 (en) 2003-05-28 2004-02-20 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US6720131B1 true US6720131B1 (en) 2004-04-13

Family

ID=32043490

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/446,582 Expired - Fee Related US6720131B1 (en) 2003-05-28 2003-05-28 Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US6720131B1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040237821A1 (en) * 2003-05-28 2004-12-02 Anocoil Corporation Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
CN102043353B (en) * 2009-10-21 2014-05-21 中芯国际集成电路制造(上海)有限公司 Method for spraying developer solution on wafer

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4837131A (en) * 1985-06-27 1989-06-06 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Developing method for photosensitive material
US5398092A (en) * 1992-07-08 1995-03-14 Mitsubishi Paper Mills Limited Method and apparatus for developing lithographic offset printing plate
US6174646B1 (en) * 1997-10-21 2001-01-16 Konica Corporation Image forming method

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4837131A (en) * 1985-06-27 1989-06-06 Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd. Developing method for photosensitive material
US5398092A (en) * 1992-07-08 1995-03-14 Mitsubishi Paper Mills Limited Method and apparatus for developing lithographic offset printing plate
US6174646B1 (en) * 1997-10-21 2001-01-16 Konica Corporation Image forming method

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040237821A1 (en) * 2003-05-28 2004-12-02 Anocoil Corporation Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
US7013806B2 (en) * 2003-05-28 2006-03-21 Anocoil Corporation Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
CN102043353B (en) * 2009-10-21 2014-05-21 中芯国际集成电路制造(上海)有限公司 Method for spraying developer solution on wafer

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7329058B1 (en) High flow rate development of photosensitive plates
US4737810A (en) Photosensitive material developing apparatus
US3903541A (en) Apparatus for processing printing plates precoated on one side only
JP6140307B2 (en) Measures and methods for processing lithographic printing plates
US7013806B2 (en) Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
US20170334209A1 (en) Nozzle surface wiping device, liquid discharge apparatus, and head cleaning method
US6720131B1 (en) Method and apparatus for applying a film of developer fluid onto a lithographic printing plate in a developing station
US6905266B2 (en) Wire wound applicator for developing fluid on a lithographic printing plate
EP0247835B1 (en) Method of processing presensitized lithographic printing plate and apparatus therefor
EP0273699A2 (en) Developing device for photosensitive material
TWI225676B (en) Substrate treatment device
JPH0560585B2 (en)
US6905267B1 (en) Method for reducing consumption of plate processing fluid
WO2022044570A1 (en) Developer management method, platemaking method, developer management device, and platemaking device
US20030072575A1 (en) Method and apparatus for conveying a workpiece through a workstation and specifically for conveying a lithographic printing plate through a developing station and for applying a developer solution
WO2008054638A2 (en) High flow rate development of photosensitive plates
JPS62257171A (en) Method and device for developing photosensitive lithographic plate improving development property
JPS63282740A (en) Method for developing photosensitive material for printing
JPS6388554A (en) Developing process method for phtosensitive lithographic printing plate
JPS62278555A (en) Developing method for photosensitive lithographic printing plate to improve film remaining
JPH0778632B2 (en) Development processing method of non-silver salt light-sensitive material capable of improving development uniformity
JPH01200257A (en) Method and device for development processing of photosensitive planographic printing plate
JP3776594B2 (en) Photosensitive material processing equipment
JP3274560B2 (en) Lithographic printing plate processing equipment
JPH0327046A (en) Method and device for processing photosensitive planographic printing plate

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: ANOCOIL CORPORATION, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:FROMSON, HOWARD A.;REEL/FRAME:015118/0646

Effective date: 20040312

Owner name: FROMSON, HOWARD A., CONNECTICUT

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:ROZELL, WILLIAM J.;REEL/FRAME:015118/0638

Effective date: 20030522

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20080413